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File: Career Pdf 199166 | 5 Career Development Comps Review
5 career development 1 theories of career development although many theories have been presented to explain how career development occurs five theories are most influential today these are the theories ...

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                                                       5. Career Development 
                  
                 1. Theories of career development 
                 Although many theories have been presented to explain how career development 
                 occurs; five theories are most influential today. These are the theories of Donald Super, 
                 John Holland, Linda Gottfredson, John Krumboltz and Mark Savickas. 
                 Other theories have historical value and newer ones are introduced regularly. Some of 
                 the theories presented in the section on Human Growth and Development also have 
                 implications for career development such as that of Erikson and Levinson. 
                  
                 2. Classification of career theories: Actuarial and Developmental 
                 Actuarial: theorists from this perspective focused on some 'structure' of the individual 
                 such as needs, traits, interests, etc., and designed a theory of how career development 
                 occurs from that basis. Examples of actuarial theories are: trait-factor and needs-based 
                 theories.  
                 Developmental: theorists from this perspective viewed career development as 
                 occurring over time, usually through stages. This process of career development could 
                 include various 'structures' such as self-concept and need. 
                  
                 3. Donald Super (developmental approach to careers) 
                 Super preferred a broad self-description and labeled himself a differential- 
                 developmental-social-phenomenological psychologist. Evolving over time, his 
                 Early Super 
                 His early conception of career development (1950's and 1960's) included vocational 
                 development stages and vocational development tasks. The vocational development 
                 stages are: 
                        Growth (birth to 14-15). Development of capacity, interests and self-concept. 
                        Exploratory (15-24).Tentative choices made. 
                        Establishment (25-44). Trial (in work situations) and stabilize. d.Maintenance (45-
                         64). Continual adjustment process. 
                        Decline (65+). Preretirement, work output issues and retirement. 
                 He later changed decline to disengagement. 
                 According to Super, self-concept was implemented in choice of career. 
                 He identified the concept of career maturity and later renamed it career adaptability to 
                 make it less age-related. 
                 Super also identified five vocational development tasks. These are: 
                        Crystallization (ages 14-18)-formulating a general vocational goal through 
                         awareness. 
                        Specification (18-21)-moving from a tentative to a specific vocational choice. 
                        Implementation (21-24)-completing training and entering employment. 
                        Stabilization (24-35)-confirming a preferred choice by performing the job. 
                        Consolidation (35+)-becoming established in a career; advancing; achieving 
                         status. 
               The ages of Super's stages and tasks no longer apply because some people have gaps 
               in their employment (careers) and recycle. This model was initially focused primarily on 
               white, middle-class, college-educated males. 
               Super recognized that we can repeat or recycle through these developmental tasks. 
                
               Later Super 
               By the 1970's, Super viewed career development as more holistic, that is, involving 
               more of the individual than just the job or career. He presented the concept of life-career 
               rainbow which included the life span with its major stages and life space which consists 
               of the roles we play. 
               The nine major roles we play in life are:  
               Child          Student               Citizen, 
               Spouse         Homemaker             Parent,  
               Worker         Leisurite             Pensioner. 
               Roles are played out in four theaters which are:  
               Home           community             school          and workplace. 
               Super developed the Archway Model as a graphic representation of the many 
               determinants that comprise one's self-concept. One pillar of the archway represents the 
               factors and variables within the individual that influence career development such as 
               needs, aptitudes, interests and achievements. The other pillar includes external factors 
               such as family, community, and labor market. At the top of the arch between the two 
               pillars is the Self of the individual. Super is responsible for the Career Pattern Study 
               which examined the vocational behavior of 9th graders all the way into their 30s. Those 
               adolescents who were career mature and achieving in high school tended to be more 
               career mature and successful as young adults. 
                
               4. John Holland (a typology) 
               Although much of Holland's theory is actuarial or structural in approach, he goes to 
               considerable lengths to explain how types develop. Furthermore, types provide the 
               energy and motivation to do certain things, learn certain skills, associate with particular 
               people, and avoid other skills as well as people. 
               To Holland, career choice is an expression of personality. We choose a career 
               based on the stereotypes we hold about different jobs or careers. Holland identified six 
               modal personal orientations (personality types) which developed based on genetic 
               factors, environment, and parental influences. 
               Holland's six styles or types are: 
                      Realistic: aggressive; prefers explicit tasks requiring physical manipulation; has 
                       poor interpersonal skills. Examples: mechanic, technician. 
                      Investigative: intellectual; prefers systematic, creative investigation activities; 
                       has poor persuasive and social skills. Examples: chemist, computer programmer. 
                      Artistic: imaginative; prefers self-expression via physical, verbal or other 
                       materials; dislikes systematic and ordered activities. Examples: artist, editor. 
                
                        Social: social; prefers activities that inform, develop, or enlighten others; dislikes 
                         activities involving tools or machines. Examples:  teacher, counselor. 
                        Enterprising: extroverted; prefers leadership and persuasive roles; dislikes 
                         abstract, cautious activities. Examples: manager, sales personnel. 
                        Conventional: practical; prefers ordered, structured activities; dislikes 
                         ambiguous and unsystematized tasks. Examples: file clerk, cost accountant. 
                 Every person has all six types in varying amounts. 
                 Occupational environments may be categorized into the same six types because 
                 environments are defined by the people (types) in that environment. 
                 One of the values of Holland's theory is that there are many methods for determining an 
                 individual's type. He developed the Vocational Preference Inventory and the Self-
                 Directed Search. Other instruments, such as the Strong Interest Inventory and the 
                 Career Assessment Inventory, have adopted Holland's typology. Focused questions in 
                 an interview can usually determine the individual's Holland type as well. 
                 Most occupations in the United States have been assigned a Holland type and can be 
                 found in the Dictionary of Holland Occupational Codes. 
                 Holland used the hexagon to explain some important concepts about his theory: 
                 The types must be arrayed around the hexagon in the order indicated. The theory is 
                 sometimes referred to as the RIASEC theory. 
                        Consistency: adjacent pairs of types are more psychologically alike than 
                         nonadjacent pairs of types. 
                        Differentiation: an individual's profile of six types has significant highs and lows 
                         (differentiated) or the profile of six types tends to be flat (undifferentiated). 
                        Congruence: the individual's type and the environment type are the same. 
                        Vocational identity: high identity individuals are those who have a clear and 
                         stable picture of their interests and goals. 
                 Holland's theory is very popular; many others have incorporated this theory into their 
                 own work. 
                  
                 5. Linda Gottfredson (developmental) 
                 This newer (1980's) career development theory is called 'Circumscription and 
                 Compromise' and focuses on the vocational development processes experienced by 
                 children. Vocational self-concept is central and influences occupational selection. 
                 Individuals circumscribe (narrow down occupations) and compromise (opt out of 
                 unavailable or inappropriate occupations) as they develop. 
                 Individual development progresses through the following four stages: 
                     1.  Orientation to size and power (age 3-5). Children have neither; they are 
                             concrete thinkers and begin to understand what it means to be an adult. Even 
                             as young as age 3 they can name occupations they would like to do. 
                     2.  Orientation to sex roles (6-8). Children learn that adults have different roles, 
                             and occupations are sex-typed. Even today, most occupations are performed 
                             primarily by one sex or the other. 
                     3.  Orientation to social valuation (9-13). There is greater awareness of values 
                             held by peers, family and community; occupations vary greatly in social value 
                             -desirability. 
                     4.  Orientation to internal unique self (14+). In occupational selection as a 
                             teenager or adult, internal factors such as aspirations, values, and interests 
                             are critical. 
                 Young children (ages 6-8, and even younger according to some research) tend to 
                 choose occupations which fit their gender. Preadolescents tend to choose occupations 
                 which have social values consistent with their perceived social class. They may also 
                 rule out occupations which are inappropriate because of a mismatch in ability, 
                 intelligence level or cultural factors. In the teenage years and later, self-awareness of 
                 personal characteristics helps determine which occupation is selected. 
                 Individuals develop a cognitive map of occupations based on sex-type, social value 
                 (prestige), and field of work (interest area). A zone of acceptable alternatives is 
                 identified and occupations within this range are consistent with the individual's self-
                 concept. 
                  
                 6. John Krumboltz (learning theory of career counseling -- LTCC) 
                 Krumboltz used Bandura's social learning theory to identify the principal concepts for 
                 this theory of career development and career counseling. 
                 Reinforcement theory, cognitive information processing, and classical behaviorism are 
                 important concepts. 
                 Career development and career decision making involve the following: 
                        Genetic endowments and special abilities. This includes inherited qualities 
                         which may set limits on career opportunities. 
                        Environmental conditions and events. Events and circumstances influence 
                         skill development, activities and career preferences. Natural resources, economic 
                         conditions, and legislation may be involved. 
                        Instrumental and associative learning experiences. This is learning through 
                         reactions to consequences, results of actions, and through reactions to others. 
                         Reinforcement and non-reinforcement of behaviors and skills are important. 
                         Associative learning experiences come from associations learned through 
                         observations and written materials. They influence an individual's perceptions. 
                        Task approach skills (problem-solving skills, work habits, etc.). Skills 
                         acquired such as problem-solving, work habits, mental sets, and emotional and 
                         cognitive responses. 
                 Learning experiences over the lifetime influence career choice. An individual's 
                 generalizations and beliefs may be problematic and may need to be challenged by the 
                 career counselor. New beliefs and courses of action may need to be learned and 
                 substituted. The Career Beliefs Inventory of Krumboltz may be used to identify clients’ 
                 mental barriers preventing them from taking action. Unplanned and chance events will 
                 influence an individuals' career development, and such occurrences should be expected 
                 and taken advantage of Krumboltz refers to these events as 'planned happenstance.' 
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